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BBM Android app hits Samsung Galaxy phones on Friday

BlackBerry has finally confirmed the release date for the BlackBerry Messenger app on your Android phone -- if you have a Samsung.

Richard Trenholm Former Movie and TV Senior Editor
Richard Trenholm was CNET's film and TV editor, covering the big screen, small screen and streaming. A member of the Film Critic's Circle, he's covered technology and culture from London's tech scene to Europe's refugee camps to the Sundance film festival.
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Richard Trenholm
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BBM for Android is coming on Friday -- if you have a Samsung Galaxy phone. Samsung has finally confirmed the release date for the BlackBerry Messenger Android app.

But before you get too excited, that news has come from Samsung Nigeria, which tweeted that the BBM app will be exclusive to Galaxy devices for three months starting this week -- although BlackBerry is reportedly distancing itself from the talk of an exclusive deal. I've asked Samsung and BlackBerry when the app will land on these shores; when we know you'll know. 

After a long wait you'll finally be able to download BBM and install the app on your Android device. The new BBM app swaps instant messages with other BBM users even if you long ago ditched your BlackBerry for a different phone. 

The new app will have instant messaging and group chat from the start, with voice calls to follow later.  

Since BlackBerry announced it would open up BBM to other phones, wrong'uns have targeted keen ex-BlackBerry owners with fake BBM apps, fooling phone fans into downloading the impostor app and hitting them with ads, spam or worse.

BlackBerry has struggled against the iPhone and more affordable Android phones in the last couple of years, and even the lure of the free and hugely popular BBM IM service has waned in the face of apps like WhatsApp or Samsung ChatOn -- which, like the new BBM app, work across different devices so you can chat with friends and family even if they have different phones to you.

Being free and open to longer messages than texting, BBM saw teenagers become big BlackBerry users alongside the more traditional email-addicted business types, although BlackBerry never managed to really capitalise on that market by releasing cool phones.

Will you return to BBM or has another service won you over? What's the best chat app? Is the BBM app a good move, or has BlackBerry just killed off the last reason to actually buy a BlackBerry? Tell me your thoughts in the comments or chat away on our Facebook page.